An open-source Gaussian beamlet decomposition tool for modeling astronomical telescopes
Affiliation
Wyant College of Optical Sciences, University of ArizonaSteward Observatory, University of Arizona
Issue Date
2020
Metadata
Show full item recordPublisher
SPIECitation
Ashcraft, J. N., & Douglas, E. S. (2020, December). An open-source Gaussian beamlet decomposition tool for modeling astronomical telescopes. In Modeling, Systems Engineering, and Project Management for Astronomy IX (Vol. 11450, p. 114501D). International Society for Optics and Photonics.Rights
Copyright © 2020 SPIE.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
In the pursuit of directly imaging exoplanets, the high-contrast imaging community has developed a multitude of tools to simulate the performance of coronagraphs on segmented-aperture telescopes. As the scale of the telescope increases and science cases move toward shorter wavelengths, the required physical optics propagation to optimize high-contrast imaging instruments becomes computationally prohibitive. Gaussian Beamlet Decom- position (GBD) is an alternative method of physical optics propagation that decomposes an arbitrary wavefront into paraxial rays. These rays can be propagated expeditiously using ABCD matrices, and converted into their corresponding Gaussian beamlets to accurately model physical optics phenomena without the need of diffraction integrals. The GBD technique has seen recent development and implementation in commercial software (e.g. FRED, CODE V, ASAP)1-3 but appears to lack an open-source platform. We present a new GBD tool developed in Python to model physical optics phenomena, with the goal of alleviating the computational burden for modeling complex apertures, many-element systems, and introducing the capacity to model misalignment errors. This study demonstrates the synergy of the geometrical and physical regimes of optics utilized by the GBD technique, and is motivated by the need for advancing open-source physical optics propagators for segmented- aperture telescope coronagraph design and analysis. This work illustrates GBD with Poisson's spot calculations and show significant runtime advantage of GBD over Fresnel propagators for many-element systems. © 2020 SPIE.Note
Immediate accessISSN
0277-786XISBN
9781510000000Version
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1117/12.2561921